COLLINS: Is money the best form of justice in sexual abuse cases?
CASH SETTLEMENTS PAID OUT TO VICTIMS of sex crimes don’t solve the real issue. Proper justice for those who are harmed. That needs to change.
Often, to make a crime go away, individuals and companies wind up settling with the victims by offering a cash settlement. That settlement often comes with a non-disclosure agreement that prevents the name of the offender from being disclosed.
A recent report in Time magazine indicates that, while cash helps pay for services to help victims access resources, it isn’t what many of those victims want. First and foremost, the report suggests victims want acknowledgment and amends from the bystanders and others complicit in these crimes, not just the offenders. They want to stop the common conclusion that the victim must have been at least partly at fault. That she dressed provocatively to encourage and entice the perpetrator or did something else to make the offender think it was okay to abuse a victim.
Either by complicity or inaction, there is often a larger group who knew something was happening but would not speak up. That mentality has to change.


